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Helen Buttenwieser (Lehman)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: New York, New York, NY, United States
Death: November 22, 1989 (84)
New York, New York, NY, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Arthur Lehman and Adele Lehman
Wife of Benjamin Buttenwieser
Mother of Private; Carol Helen Buttenwieser; Peter Lehman Buttenwieser and Private
Sister of Dorothy Bernhard and Frances Lehman Loeb

Managed by: Private User
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Immediate Family

About Helen Buttenwieser

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Lehman_Buttenwieser

"New York, New York City Births, 1846-1909," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:2W4Y-SLX : 11 February 2018), Helen Lehman, 08 Oct 1905; citing Manhattan, New York, New York, United States, reference cn 48104 New York Municipal Archives, New York; FHL microfilm 1,984,760. Helen Lehman Buttenwieser (October 8, 1905 – December 31, 1989) was an American lawyer and philanthropist.

A member of the Lehman family of New York, she graduated from Connecticut College and New York University Law School. In 1929, she married Benjamin Buttenwieser, a prominent banker and philanthropist.

Her legal work focused on aiding women and children (especially adoption, foster care, and child welfare) and preserving civil liberties. From 1946 to 1948 she chaired a New York City investigation into reforming the adoption system. She founded her own law firm, becoming active in the New York Democratic State Committee, the New York City Bar Association, the Legal Aid Society, the New York chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, and the Legal Defense Fund of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

The Helen Lehman Buttenwieser Scholarship and Fellowship at Columbia University is named in her honor.


http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/buttenwieser-helen-lehman

HELEN LEHMAN BUTTENWIESER

1905 – 1989

by Elisabeth Israels Perry

A distinguished attorney who specialized in adoption and foster care issues and represented child welfare agencies and the children under their care, Helen Lehman Buttenwieser was born on October 8, 1905, and grew up in a Jewish family prominent in New York banking and philanthropic circles. Her mother was Adele Lewisohn, a suffragist and daughter of Adolph Lewisohn, who had made a fortune in copper. Her father was banker Arthur Lehman, whose brothers were Herbert H. Lehman, governor of New York, and Irving Lehman, a judge on the Court of Appeals. Her husband, Benjamin J. Buttenwieser, was a member of the banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Co., and a United States assistant high commissioner in Germany after World War II. They had four children.

A graduate of Horace Mann School for Girls and Connecticut College (1926), she studied for a year at the New York School of Social Work and then entered child guidance work as a volunteer. While raising her family she served as board member (1929–1945) and then president of Madison House Settlement on New York’s Lower East Side, in posts to which Mayor James J. Walker appointed her on the Commission on Social Welfare (1929–1932), and as trustee (1930) of the Widowed Mothers Pension Fund and of the Citizens Committee for Children. As a Jewish Big Sister, she testified in many court cases concerning children and women’s rights. This experience led her to think about becoming a judge in Children’s or Domestic Relations Court (now Family Court). While this plan remained unfulfilled, she took the first step, enrolling in New York University Law School in 1933.

Buttenwieser graduated in 1936, one of only twelve women in her class. A distinguished legal career, in which she accumulated many firsts for women, followed. She was the first woman hired at Cravath, Swaine & Moore, although the firm insisted that she remain in an office by herself for her first year and expected her to leave when she became pregnant. As a staff member of the Legal Aid Society, she served two months in the society’s Criminal Court Office in Manhattan, work then deemed “inappropriate for women.” Later, as a member of her own firm of Lindau, Robbins, Buttenwieser & Backer, she was active in the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, a member of the Democratic State Committee (15th Assembly District), the first woman chair of a standing committee of the Bar Association of the City of New York, and the first woman to serve on the board of Title Guarantee & Trust Co. (appointed in 1949).

In 1946, Buttenwieser pioneered in the movement to correct abuses in adoptions. Reports of a black market in babies and of babies remaining in foster care so long that they became too old for placement led three groups—the Welfare Council of New York City, the United Hospital Fund, and the New York Academy of Medicine—to form a New York City Committee on Adoptions and appoint Buttenwieser its chair. Its report, issued in 1948, recommended major reforms in the adoption and foster parent system, including prompt notification of appropriate public agencies of couples’ intentions to adopt, authorized investigations of homes of presumptive adoptive parents, and establishment of procedures for terminating unsuccessful adoptions and for preventing placements of children for profit.

An avid civil libertarian, Buttenwieser was the first woman chair of the Legal Aid Society board and a trustee of the New York Civil Liberties Union. When Alger Hiss, convicted of perjury in a spy case in 1949, sought to overturn his conviction in 1950, Buttenwieser became his counsel; later, she helped bail out an accused Soviet spy, Dr. Robert Soblen, who later fled to Israel. She was a board member of the Legal Defense Fund of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. During the 1960s, her prior civil liberties work was used against Mayor Robert Wagner, whom she was supporting. In the 1970s, she presented amicus curiae briefs to the United States Supreme Court challenging the government’s right to terminate Aid to Families with Dependent Children on the basis of a mother’s sexual behavior. In an interview given shortly before her death, she characterized her career as “just a way of life.” “I never thought of a career,” she said. “I wanted to go to law school, so I went to law school. I wanted to practice law, so I practiced law. I didn’t ever stop to say did I want to do something—I just did it.” Throughout her life in the law she served as an important role model for many women attorneys.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Buttenwieser, Helen Lehman. Papers. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe College; NYTimes, passim, 1932–1989.

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http://www.neilpiwovar.com/genealogy/tngfiles912/getperson.php?pers...

http://www.balouka.net/n356.htm#3932

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Helen Buttenwieser's Timeline

1905
October 8, 1905
New York, New York, NY, United States
1933
June 20, 1933
New York, NY, United States
1935
December 9, 1935
New York, New York, United States
1989
November 22, 1989
Age 84
New York, New York, NY, United States